Monday, December 31, 2012

This whole fiscal cliff drama ignores the central fact of what it entails; despite abysmally low public opinion ratings (except in the reddest red counties of the Red states); despite dragging down perfectly good Republican candidates that might actually be able to do something good for the country; despite standing up for family values gun rights even after the massacre in Connecticut; despite promoting anti-science political positions as if they were virtuous; despite contributing directly to the deregulatory environment that caused the recession, anti-environmental stances that poison the fetuses they purport to protect, defense of the wealthiest from paying any more of their share to maintain the basic functions of a civilized NATION; despite the dismissal, denunciation, and disaster of their chosen son candidates in the most recent election; despite all that,

the Tea Party is winning.How? By being so intransigent, insane, and incontrovertible that That Which Seemed Unthinkable is Now Happening.

Oh, I know I'm not the first to say it. And there are negotiations going on that might blunt some of the tax increases which would be a drag on the economy. And I expect that the sequestration will get significantly reduced.

But we're not sure yet. And I think the low-IQ Tea Party representatives want it this way, like it this way, and don't want to change it. Partly because of where they're from (read the article) and partly because they aren't convinced that anything, yes, anything that government does is worthwhile. Which makes one wonder why they are even in the government, but that's a question for another day.

But look at how we got into this miasmic muddle of a mess in the first place.

In 2010, many Tea Party zealots got elected after demonizing the Obama administration's health care plan, which was conceived and implemented partly to reduce our increasing health care costs, which are making the national deficit go higher and higher! But did that prevent the Tea Party from making a big socialist deal out of it? No.

Once in office, then they held the country's faith and credit hostage over ridiculous demands to tie the debt ceiling to deficit reduction (through ONLY spending cuts). That led to a national credit downgrade (which means our borrowing costs go up, which INCREASES the DEFICIT), and to a bad deal in which a supercommittee would come up with a plan to reduce the deficit, or if they didn't, really BIG, really BAD, UNTHINKABLY RANDOM budget cuts would take place.

Everybody knew that wouldn't happen, because some of the biggest cuts would fall on the Department of Defense, and everybody knows that Republicans are big on defense, big budget projects that keep the home citizens employed, and national defense is supposedly one of the few things that Tea Partiers agree the national government should do, because it says so directly in the Con-sti-two-shun.

But then the Tea Party, waggling the lips of their robot John Boehner and their marionette Eric Cantor (note that they have their hands up the asses of both of these clowns to manipulate them), said that the supercommittee could not consider, propound, or suggest a realistic plan for deficit reduction over a decade that included increased revenues (also called 'taxes').

So, no plan. Then the election, in which the Tea Party forced Mitt Romney to swing so far to the right that he amazingly couldn't flop back to the middle (despite his best efforts to do so), and an election that delightfully showed what empty brains and empty suits the true Tea Party candidates really were.

So, Obama won. But the Tea Party core did too, at least most of them in the safe ruddy red gerrymandered districts. And they didn't acknowledge that Obama had won because the majority of the electorate had repudiated both their candidates and their positions. Poll after poll after poll after poll shows that Americans in the committee of the whole, meaning us, want a solution that works, and one that includes higher revenues,most of it from people that consider a Mercedes Benz minivan the family car.

So they didn't give. And they even shot the seat out from under Speaker Boneless, by not giving him his Plan B.

This is what they want, actually. They want the sequester. They want a big f*cking slice out of the government, no matter how many people on the lower rungs get kicked off the ladder into the mud, no matter if you have to wait a year to get a passport processed by the one remaining employee who knows how to do anything at the State Department, no matter if another interstate bridge collapses due to inadequate inspections and postponed repairs and kills another 50 people or so.

That's because they don't CARE. They are beholden, like cultic apostles, to an inflexible belief system. They will serve that system unthinkingly, no matter what the cost it incurs on real people that just want a government that manages to do something, let alone inspire us to higher aspirations.

So no matter what happens to the fiscal cliff and the sequester and the next round of debt ceiling hostage taking, by getting us this far, and by making the Speaker dance to their tune and Mitch McConnell sing their praises, remember - the worse it gets, the more that the Tea Party wins. And also remember, the worse it gets; credit downgrade, recession, higher unemployment, lapses in national security, more brutal massacres of children and firefighters with assault weapons, less mental health treatments for those that need it, more hungry kids, more teen mothers who can't get abortions -- that's how the Tea Party wants it. Even if they say they don't.

And in case you think I'm wrong about this, just look at how Sam Brownback is screwing up Kansas.

Thursday, December 27, 2012

Miley Cyrus has seemed to be making more news recently with her body upgrade, her edgy style, her risky Twitpics, her fit abs, and her gorgeous hunky Hemsworth boyfriend. And her movies have mostly flopped. So it makes sense for her to get back to basics and sing, which she's pretty good at.

Sunday, December 23, 2012

Kelly Brook's behind-the-scenes video for her new calendar is so hot that I almost feel embarrassed linking to it here. So if you accidentally click Play, cover your eyes. The red suit border on outrageous, not that that's a bad thing when it comes to Kelly.

The Oksana Baiul thing made me wonder whatever happened to Elena Berezhnaya, the really cute pairs skater that got a skate blade in the head and lost her ability to talk for awhile, recovered from that, got a new partner, moved to the top of the rankings, then unfortunately got caught up in the 2002 Olympic figure skating judging scandal and ended up sharing the gold medal with Pelletier/Sale, an event which resulted in the much more fair system that's in place today (and the skaters are doing a decent job artistically, as well).

The big news is that after the Olympics, she got romantically hitched to British skater Steven Cousins, had two children with him, and at some point also got married to him (not sure in what order). She did some exhibitions post-Olympics but is now retired from skating. She was on a Canadian skating reality show called "Battle of the Blades".

I found a couple of semi-sexy pictures of her too. Like I said, she was (and still is) really cute. She matured from the pixie cut look she had in the Olympics.

Saw the "Nutracker on Ice" with Oksana Baiul last weekend. No doubt about it, she was balletic. This made me wonder whatever happened to her, of course. Well, she's got a Web site, but apparently she hasn't done anything for a year.

But she does have a Twitter account (https://twitter.com/OksanaBaiul), keeps it updated fairly regularly, and from that I gather she was in a recent Evening with Champions show somewhere. More work couldprobably figure that out, but I've done enough. She lives in Pennsylvania now. No indications of her romantic life or prospects.

Friday, December 21, 2012

Passing on this public service announcement: avocados are good for you!

More reason to think so:

"Specifically, the pilot study of 11 healthy men suggests that fresh Hass
avocado, when eaten with a burger may neutralize Interleukin-6 (IL-6)—a
protein that is a measure of inflammation—compared to eating a burger
without fresh avocado. The researchers observed a
significant peak (approximately a 70 percent increase), of IL-6 four
hours after the plain burger was eaten, but little effect on IL-6
(approximately a 40 percent increase) over the same time period when
fresh avocado was eaten with the burger."

This was an interesting story, because low water levels in the lake are also echoed by low water levels in the Mississippi River. There is some snow in the upper Midwest now (finally) - maybe that will help down the line.

In contrast to Bar Refaeli, Hayden Panettiere is not a supermodel. But what she embodies is wholesome cuteness in an athletic compact package. And viewing her love/sex life, she likes her boys big and strong, which has it's own lascivy appeal.

Now, let's consider why this is an OMG moment. Lots of women can be found naked these days in the world of electronic data transfer (i.e., the Internet). Lots of beautiful women can be found in that state. And it's not unusual for top level supermodels (like Miranda Kerr or Erin Heatherton) to Expose All. But it's still rare, and usually those are posed situations.

But when ultrasupermodel Bar Refaeli gives us a glimpse of domestic nudity (even if we don't get the entire cabana), meaning this is what Leo DiCaprio got to live with for several years -- I sure hope he didn't ever get entirely accustomed to it -- that's a different level. It gives us a chance to put ourselves in the scene right there with her, watching her in the bath, emerging from the shower, cleaning the pool (well, that's not exactly sexy), lounging on the sofa and ultimately exposing her dimpled backside, which defines the word delectable in the physical sense.

It was quite a victory for the humble, unyummy but highly important menhaden (also called bunker) when the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission (ASMFC) bucked a lot of pressure not to do anything (mainly from the neighboring state across the water, Ol' Virginny) and put in a catch limit on menhaden. Menhaden is not sleek and sexy, but it feeds a lot of glamorous sportfish; it's a vital link in the pelagic food chain.

" “When there’s bunker in the water, I have striped bass, weakfish and
bluefish for my customers to catch,” said Capt. Paul Eidman, a charter
boat captain from New Jersey and the president of the advocacy group
Menhaden Defenders. “Without abundant menhaden in the water, my game
fish go somewhere else.”

The main business that Omega Proteins in Virginia has been in has been taking out as much menhaden as they could to make omega-3 fatty acids and fish meal (mainly to feed farmed fish). Now, of course I've said that they've got to come up with tasty fish that eat plant protein and produce omega-3s, and I think back in my recent files they've been able to do some of that. But still, Omega Proteins has a big business, but the pressure from all the other states that don't have an Omega processing plant came to bear, and this led the ASMFC to really do the right thing this time and cut back.

They reduced the harvest by 20%, which Omega said was a "deep cut". Sorry, since when unless you're trying to sway public opinion is a 20% cutback "deep"? 50%, that's deep.

This is good, real good, because it's a recognition that fisheries are not limitless and conservation is important to maintain the healthy functioning of the oceans. We as humans are putting tremendous negative pressure on the ocean environment; it's nice to see something that's positive, even if it's only a little.

Wednesday, December 19, 2012

One of the great unknowns in wondering if we are alone in the vastness of the galaxy and universe was (!) how many planets there are. Now it seems that if you're a star and you don't have at least one planet, you're probably in the minority. Planets of all sizes are popping up in all sorts of orbits, some of them in the essentially right place for life to be quite possible.

So now, in our cosmic backyard (about 12 light years away), comes the putative discovery of a planet in that star's habitable zone. It's not like we're going to get there soon to check, but it's remarkable to me that now we have evidence of one of the basic needs of life elsewhere in the Universe that close by. I doubt I will live long enough for there to be definitive proof that We are Not Alone, but I think it likely that before I die there will be sufficient evidence for scientists to be able to state with strong conviction We are Probably Not Unique in the Vast Cosmos.

The star is Tau Ceti, by the way. What's really neat about that is that Tau Ceti has been used in several science fiction stories, notably L. Sprague de Camp's Viagens series and Asimov's The Caves of Steel. I'm sure this news would make them smile if they were with us now. (And, speaking lasciviously, the Krishnans, who lived on one of the Tau Ceti planets, where oviparous mammals who could mate with humans, even though they couldn't have offspring. Shades of John Carter and Dejah Thoris.)

And what's even more neat is that de Camp had three inhabited planets in the Tau Ceti system, and the astronomers think it has five, even though only one is in the potential habitable zone. Can't have everything.

Bradley Wiggins, who won the Tour de France and an Olympic cycling gold medal, was picked as the British sports personality of the year, with heptathlete gold medalist Jessica Ennis second and Andy Murray third. I think in any other year than an Olympic year Murray would have won it (but also, one of the reasons he was a contender was that he won the Olympic singles gold, so maybe not). If he wins Wimbledon he's a shoo-in.

England is pretty comfortably in the lead; if India doesn't pass them in their second innings, then they'll get a draw and win the series, which they haven't done in India for a long time. Good for the 'tourists'.

Star English batsmen for the first innings were the reinstated Kevin Pietersen and newcomer Joe Root, both with 73. In the second innings, as I write this, Jonathan Trott, who hasn't had a great season to date, is still batting. In the first innings he did something not cricket, and it made India mad (he hit a bowl that was essentially a dead ball and scored 4. But sometimes you have to show the other team who's in charge).

Oh yeah, apparently there were a lot of bad calls, because they weren't using instant replay. From what I can tell, the sentiment is that this will be likely one of the last times they don't have instant replay (which they call Decision Review).

And this shows that the super-skeptics like Morano and Watts are losing traction:

The biggest change in the polling is among people who trust
scientists only a little or not at all. About 1 in 3 of the people
surveyed fell into that category.

Within that highly skeptical group, 61 percent now say temperatures
have been rising over the past 100 years. That's a substantial increase
from 2009, when the AP-GfK poll found that only 47 percent of those with
little or no trust in scientists believed the world was getting warmer.

This is an important development because, often in the past, opinion
about climate change doesn't move much in core groups — like those who
deny it exists and those who firmly believe it's an alarming problem,
said Jon Krosnick, a Stanford University social psychologist and
pollster. Krosnick, who consulted with The Associated Press on the poll
questions, said the changes the poll shows aren't in the hard-core
"anti-warming" deniers, but in the next group, who had serious doubts.

So I think it's time to declare the loss and pack it in, skeptical leaders. The only people you're convincing are the ones who are already convinced it's not a problem. The fence sitters are getting off the fence onto the intelligent side. Now we have to take this momentum and do something with it.

Apparently the business of asteroid fly-bys is pretty decent. The U.S. has
done it, the Japanese have done it (even bringing back little flecks of one),
and now the Chinese have flown by the bi-lobed Toutatis. Given that it seems relatively easy to rendesvous with a near-Earth asteroid, why don't we just figure out how to get some astronauts onto one?

I pride myself in keeping track of these kinds of missions, and I have to admit
that I didn't know they were doing this until I read the article. But I did know this
satellite was imaging the moon. Apparently they jumped from a Lagrange point into the
intercept orbit.

Saturday, December 15, 2012

Did you ever think about the waste that's generated in the commercial preparation of onions and garlic? Frankly, despite the fact that I enjoy both, I didn't either. But now it appears that there's something useful that can be done with it:

"Biotechnologists Rahul Negi, Gouri Satpathy, Yogesh Tyagi and Rajinder
Gupta of the GGS Indraprastha University in Delhi, India, explain how
waste from the processing and canning of onion (Allium cepa L.) and
garlic (Allium sativum L.) could be used as an alternative remediation
material for removing toxic elements from contaminated materials
including industrial effluent."

Last couple of days have been good regarding lovely pictures of lovely examples of the female form. There were of such a nature as to generate an "Oh my God" (OMG) response. So I'll be echoing my OMG moments here.

Previously in the projections of global warming, such luxury (to some people necessary) items as chocolate, coffee, and wine have been predicted to be significantly, negatively impacted by global warming. Makes sense - they are all crops that are sensitive to weather. Now, I'll bet wine will do OK, but maybe not all the varietals. Coffee is notoriously sensitive to climate, and farmers are already giving up on some locations due to changes (notably moutain slopes that were cool enough but aren't anymore). The situation is somewhat similar for cacao beans, from whence cometh chocolate.

Now, there are projections that the wheat that makes semolina pasta will be affected by global warming. All I can say is -- these global warming trends are making it really tough to be French or Italian.

"Of the three grains that make up the foundation of human diets -- wheat,
corn and rice -- wheat is the most sensitive to high temperatures,
Hertsgaard writes. "Wheat is a cool-season crop. High temperatures are
negative for its growth and quality, no doubt about it," Frank Manthey, a
professor at North Dakota State University, tells the magazine."

Since I'm on the subject of British sports, I'll note where the 4th (and last of this series) cricket Test match of England vs. India is right now. Apparently it had a heck of ending near the end of the day's play, though I haven't found the video of it yet - captain Cook (now where have I heard that before?) got a run out just before one of the India batsmen made a century. It's nearly even at the end of the first innings. If England wins or draws this match, they win the series, which is a pretty good outcome for a team that was having trouble earlier in the year.

But seeing recent pictures of Padma at
beachside, bikini-clad, must make him think wistfully about how lucky he
was to be the male participant in the baby-making. Provided, of
course, that he had a true physical role in that baby-making. If not,
I'd sure be disappointed that I hadn't had the chance to do it in the
traditional fashion. Somehow I think that he probably did get to point
Cupid's arrow in the direction of Padma's cervix, and I can mull that over in a visual reenactment a couple of times.

I've had a running little Twitter and comment battle with agitpropist Marc Morano and climate court jester Steven Goddard about snow and global warming. You see, Morano and Goddard delight in pointing out incidences of increased snowfall as being at odds with global warming, when in fact they probably aren't. (Let's get this straight right here - because the Earth is warming, EVERY weather phenomena will be somehow affected, because Earth's weather and climate are interrelated. Of course, some types of phenomena will be minimally affected, and the connection to warming will be hard to tease out. In other cases, the connection(s) will be much more obvious and discernable, and quantifiable.

Heavy early snow in the U.S. north was predicted before this winter because it was expected that colder air with moisture coming off the Arctic Ocean, due to the exposed surface caused by sea ice retreat caused by global warming would make the snowstorms happen.

This study here says some very interesting things. One of the clearest statements it make is that global warming CAUSES MORE SNOWFALL on ANTARCTICA.

Quote: "The one certainty we have about Antarctica under global warming is that snowfall will increase," Winkelmann explains."

Got that? And the next neat thing about that is that increased snowfall leads to increased ice mass and accretion. Now we find out that it will also cause increased ice loss.

Quote: "Snow piling up on the ice is heavy and hence exerts pressure -- the
higher the ice the more pressure. Because additional snowfall elevates
the grounded ice-sheet but less so the floating ice shelves, it flows
more rapidly towards the coast of Antarctica where it eventually breaks
off into icebergs and elevates sea level."

Got that? More snow, more ice piling up in the middle, more ice lost at the edges.

All due to global warming.

Now, Morano will just see "more snow in Antarctica" and send out a notice to his followers about something else that doesn't jive with global warming, when in fact it totally does.

It is (quoting Taylor Swift) never, ever, ever good to here about a vertebrate species going extinct. These river fauna seem to be particularly vulnerable. Apparently this particular species was attractive for its fur, which led to a more rapid demise. Too bad. Otters are cute, entertaining, and virtually undestructive creatures, and here we wiped this species out. I wish we (collectively, humanity) would learn a lesson from this.

As we're into the period of the Geminids meteor shower (peaking tonight), reputed to be really good, but one that I've never seen much of because of the weather, there are some interesting articles out about what causes it. Now, most meteor showers have been connected to various comets. The article describes how the Geminids are connected to object 3200_Phaethon, which doesn't act like a comet, but might be sort of a comet: rather that the "dirty snowball" model commonly applied to comets, 3200_Phaethon is possibly a "snowy dirtball". (Why that phrase never showed up on "Hill Street Blues", I'll never know).

Anyhow, I found one little picture of 3200_Phaethon imaged by radar (top), and a picture of it in the star field (bottom).

Also, some better pictures of Toutatis from the Goldstone radar. Toutatis just made a close pass, but not as close as it has been before. And it's a funny-shaped object.

Just short of 20 years later, the Senate made it easier to end a
filibuster by cutting to 60 the number of votes needed to end debate.
But the Senate has also made it much easier to conduct a filibuster. It
no longer compels obstructionists to do any work. All they have to do
now is call a filibuster. They don't have to actually stand up and talk.
At all. Ever. It's a silent filibuster. It's a
go-home-and-put-your-feet-up-after-stopping-the-work-of-the-majority
filibuster.

And those lazy, silent filibusters have increased dramatically under king McConnell. Republicans have pulled 348
go-home-and-put-your-feet-up filibusters since Democrats became the
majority party in the Senate six years ago. In just the two years of
2009 and 2010, Republicans pulled more of these lazy, silent filibusters
than the total number of filibusters that occurred in the two decades of the 1950s and 1960s.

And does anyone wonder why it is so commonly held that our governmental system is nearly broken? Just up there is one of the reasons why.

Sunday, December 9, 2012

England's cricket team, which hadn't been playing particularly well, woke up after the 1st Test match in India, bombed the hosts in the 2nd, and then took a well-contested one in the third. Kind of notable because India is considered kind of good in Test cricket (ranked 5th to England's 2nd), and because Tendulkar, though he's not what he used to be, is still playing for them.

Plus, England is the visitors (the tourists), and India is known as a very tough home team to beat.

She radiates innate, intense, and yetuntapped potential sexuality -unbridled confidence with needs unmet,(and likely still unrealized); to seeit blossom, be the agency which firstreleases floods of physical entrance-
ment and emotional reactions - burstof ecstasy as she invokes the danceof her acceptance, chants which cross the bound-daries of language, surely recognizedas universal; that would grasp the crownedexultance of my maleness, and the prized
infusion of my self in her, a rolein which I would emplace my seed and soul.

“I and some others are advocating giving the president what he wants,” said Rep. Steven C. LaTourette (R-Ohio). But he stressed that this must be part of a package that slows federal borrowing and reduces the debt by $4 trillion to $5 trillion.

“Quite frankly, some people in this 2 percent who call me, they’re more worried about the fiscal cliff than about the rates going up a couple points. That has bigger risk for them,” said LaTourette, a close Boehner ally who is retiring in January.

...

"Such views are reverberating on Capitol Hill, where Sen. Tom Coburn (R-Okla.), a champion of smaller government, on Wednesday became the latest voice to join the chorus.

“Personally, I know we have to raise revenue. I don’t really care which way we do it. Actually, I would rather see the rates go up than do it the other way, because it gives us a greater chance to reform the tax code and broaden the base in the future,” Coburn said on MSNBC."

Coburn even admitted that the government needed more revenue when he was on the failed supercommittee that couldn't come up with a plan to avoid the sequestration mess we're facing now, because the GOP House nixed any plan that was reasonable and balanced. So now they're reaping what they sow, and Coburn still, astonishingly, sounds like a voice of reason and sanity. As if that was something that the GOP could actually USE.

Senators rarely get elected President; they really only have a chance if they haven't been in the Senate long. So DeMint's bailing to be a full-time conservative with PLENTY of time to give speeches in the next four years. That's what he'll do as the Heritage Foundation President; give speeches about how what America needs is a rock-hard, nearly insane right-wing conservative as President. A guy just like him, in fact.

McCauliffe vs. Cuccinelli in Virginia next year will be a preview of Hillary Clinton vs. Jim DeMint in 2016. Mark my words.

At least one semi-conservative pundit, Jennifer Rubin of the Washington Post, is happily letting DeMint out the door hoping it'll smack his buttocks on the way out:

He has contributed more than any current senator to the dysfunction of that body.

and

It is a telling comment for what it [McConnell's statement about DeMint's resignation] does not say. It does not say the Senate was a better place because of his service or that he helped enact a conservative agenda. McConnell is a honest man and would not say such untruths.

(Other than the fact that Rubin says McConnell is an honest man, which is arguable (I would argue that he's not even close to honest), the rest of it is wonderful to read). DeMint is, in my estimation, a prime-time, fullblown nutcase. And if he runs for President, the most dangerous man in America.

The basic thesis is - everyone in society pays for the cost of profigacy and licentiousness by a few. And in this case, the few are the big fossil fuel consumers, which we citizens of the U.S. qualify as.

The other thing is, in addition to some of the monies supporting expansion of clean and reliable nuclear power, the revenues from a carbon tax could actually help lower the budget deficit.

Is there a problem with that? Apparently not much, according to one analysis:

"Perhaps because a carbon tax makes so much sense—researchers at M.I.T.
recently described it as a possible “win-win-win” response to several of
the country’s most pressing problems—economists on both ends of the
political spectrum have championed it. Liberals like Robert Frank, of
Cornell, and Paul Krugman, of Princeton, support the idea, as do
conservatives like Gary Becker, at the University of Chicago, and Greg
Mankiw, of Harvard. (Mankiw, who served as chairman of the Council of
Economic Advisers under President George W. Bush and as an adviser to
Mitt Romney, is the founding member of what he calls the Pigou Club.) A
few weeks ago, more than a hundred major corporations, including Royal
Dutch Shell and Unilever, issued a joint statement calling on lawmakers
around the globe to impose a “clear, transparent and unambiguous price
on carbon emissions,” which, while not an explicit endorsement of a
carbon tax, certainly comes close."

It's an idea whose time IS coming, and WILL come. The sooner, the better, methinks.

HuffingtonPost reports on the Brazilian Miss Bumbum contest, in which the prize goes to the woman with the best pair of glutes. Brazilian-style, that is, which is to say, curved and noticeable, and shapely in the right sort of callipygian loveliness.

Eugene Robinson scoffed at Speaker Boehner's indignance when the President used the same negotiating tactic on him that the House Republicans used over and over again last year. I.e., their idea of a compromise was making the President do it the way they wanted. They passed bills that were ludicrous, and then feigned aghastness when the Senate and the President called them what they were, i.e., ludicrous.

" “The president’s idea of a negotiation is, roll over and do what I ask,” Boehner groused.

Hmmm. Where do you imagine the president might have learned this particular bargaining technique? Might his instructors have been Boehner’s own House Republicans, who went so
far as to hold the debt ceiling for ransom — and with it, the nation’s full faith and credit — in order to get their way?"

Monday, December 3, 2012

Going way way back in this blog, I advocated menhaden protections - even coming up with the radical idea of making the entire Chesapeake Bay a menhaden fish farm (which I discovered was probably not a logistially possible idea, but hey, I was trying).

So now I read the Washington Post coming out strongly for menhaden protection. They need it, so it's a strong and visionary statement.

Unfortunately, I don't credit the Republican-controlled Virginia Assembly with the ability to do the right thing. If I am proved wrong in that, I would be tremendous change in the way things are.

"Help for menhaden could be on the way. But two things need to happen first.

First,
the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission, which is considering
steps to address the menhaden decline, must produce an aggressive action
plan. Reducing annual harvests by 25 percent or more, for example, is
an essential first step for allowing the population to recover. The
commission will release a new conservation plan this month.

Second,
East Coast states must implement the plan — including Virginia. If
Virginia fails to adopt meaningful catch restrictions, menhaden simply
will not recover."

And I should add, if Ken Cuccinelli gets elected governor, menhaden don't have a chance either.

The intransigent idiot inane Republicans in Congress recycled their same position from last year as the supposed "starting point" in the fiscal cliff negotiations. It's already been rejected by the White House, which was a certainty. But when you see the signees, it's pretty obvious that we the conglomerate American people voted this down by voting the Prez back in.

"For the first time, Boehner managed to get his entire leadership team — including conservative champions such as House Majority Leader Eric Cantor (Va.) and House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan (Wis.), the 2012 vice-presidential candidate — to
publicly sign on to a plan that explicitly calls for new tax revenue.
Republicans say they are willing to extract all the new tax money from
households earning more than $250,000 a year, the same group Obama wants
to target with higher tax rates. But the GOP plan would raise the money
by wiping out deductions instead of raising rates."As previously discussed, that math won't hunt. And if Ryan's for it, then it is obviously not the plan that the American people (at least a majority of them) voted for in expectation of reasonability and compromise by the leaders of their country.So get with the program, Boehner, and try to come up with a real plan, or you're going to be raising everybody's taxes. Politically, that don't look good at all.

One of the main barriers to widespread production of biofuel from biomass (corn stover, switchgrass, etc.) is breaking down cellulose. But as this video notes, it's something that the gut bacteria in major consumers of biomass - in this case the panda - do quite readily. So the key to biofuels is finding the bacteria with the cellulase -- the enzyme that breaks down the cellulose -- in the guts of the consumers.

So you collect panda poop and analyze the DNA of the bacteria. Simple.

She was actually pregnant on the set and while filming the upcoming action flick Jack Reacher headed by Tom Cruise, but they managed to finish it without complicating the pregnancy.

The lucky father is quite a bit her elder and not exactly a catch, but there's no accounting for taste. Hers, that is. I can easily account for his taste.

She named the tyke Solo. Luckily this was not the name that an unwed Hope Solo (U.S. women's national soccer team goalkeeper) would have chosen for her tot, if she'd had one. (Or the name of Man from U.N.C.L.E. character Napoleon Solo's son).

Recently reading an article about Firefly and V and Homeland star Morena Baccarin dropped the news that she'd gotten married in August and I never heard about it until I read that recently. Since she's one of the lovely women I like to keep track of, I was surprised that got by me.

Opening:"I
do think it is possible to be in love with two people at the same
time,’ says Morena Baccarin pensively, her pretty, pixie-ish features
looking sombre for a second. Fortunately for her husband of just 11
months, film director Austin Chick, the 33-year-old actress isn’t
referring to her own relationships, but those of her alter ego Jessica
Brody in the TV drama Homeland, which recently won four Emmys."

I wasn't sure that Natalie Portman was in the Thor sequel, but I thought she probably would be and certainly hoped so, since she played Jane Foster, the golden guy's main squeeze. Recasts just don't seem to work (vis-a-vis Katie Holmes and Maggie Gyllenhaal in the Batman trilogy, with all due deference to the fact that Maggie is a great actress).